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When the going gets tough, the tough turn female: injury and sex expression in a sex‐changing tree
Author(s) -
BlakeMahmud Jennifer,
Struwe Lena
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.1002/ajb2.1427
Subject(s) - biology , sex change , odds , affect (linguistics) , demography , expression (computer science) , sex ratio , physiology , medicine , psychology , fishery , fish <actinopterygii> , computer science , programming language , population , logistic regression , communication , sociology
Premise Plant sex is usually fixed, but in rare cases, sex expression is flexible and may be influenced by environmental factors. Theory links female sex expression to better health, but manipulative work involving the experimental change of health via injury is limited, particularly in sexually plastic species. A better understanding of mechanisms influencing shifts in sex is essential to our understanding of life history theory regarding trade‐offs in sex allocation and differential mortality. Methods We investigated the relationship between physiological stress and sex expression in sexually plastic striped maple trees ( Acer pensylvanicum ) by inflicting damage of various intensities (crown pruning, defoliation, and hydraulic restriction). We then monitored the sex expression of injured and control individuals for 2 years to assess the extent to which injury may cue changes in sex expression. Results We found that severe damage such as full defoliation or severe pruning increased odds of changing sex to female and decreased odds of changing to male. In fact, no pruned male trees flowered male 2 years later, while all males in the control group flowered partially or fully male. After full defoliation, trees had 4.5 times higher odds of flowering female. Not all injury is equal; less‐severe physical trauma did not affect the frequency of sex change to femaleness. Conclusions This work demonstrates that physical trauma in striped maple appears to exhibit a threshold effect in which only the most stressful of physiological cues instigate changes in sex expression, a phenomenon previously unknown, and that damage stress is strongly correlated with switching to femaleness. These findings have implications for population sex ratios and sustainability within an increasing stressful climate regime.

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